What's the difference between censual and census?

Censual


Definition:

  • (a.) Relating to, or containing, a census.

Example Sentences:

Census


Definition:

  • (n.) A numbering of the people, and valuation of their estate, for the purpose of imposing taxes, etc.; -- usually made once in five years.
  • (n.) An official registration of the number of the people, the value of their estates, and other general statistics of a country.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Positivity was not correlated with current residence census tract socioeconomic indicators in black or white females.
  • (2) This has been done for the census years 1960, 1970, 1975 and 1980.
  • (3) To determine whether virulence might be related to C. albicans growth in different proteolytic environments, we measured renal fungal load in burned mice and found significantly greater Candida census in kidneys from mice that were challenged with a high proteinase-generating parent C. albicans (MY 1044) versus those that were challenged with its low proteinase-generating mutant (MY 1049).
  • (4) --The study was based on data collected by the US Bureau of the Census in the March 1991 Current Population Survey for six groups of workers in health care occupations and three classifications of insurance employees.
  • (5) A census was taken of outpatient bookings at all hospitals and health centres in Oxfordshire for the main medical and surgical specialities.
  • (6) The relations among census reduction, staffing level, and resident cost were explored.
  • (7) Census figures are not available but independent observers assume that Shias still make up at least 60% of Bahrain's native population.
  • (8) Abortion patients (376) were located by census tract (104), and rates computed per 1000 females aged 15-45 years.
  • (9) The Bureau of the Census has developed a model describing the joint effect of sampling and nonsampling errors on census statistics.
  • (10) The last census indicated that 4.2 million don't have English as a first language, less than 8% of the total.
  • (11) The Medical Record departments of the five teaching hospitals in Edmonton, plus the 37 community hospitals in the eight census districts of the northern half of the province of Alberta, Canada, were contacted, and a search was made of all patients with a discharge diagnosis of Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis.
  • (12) Collision locations were abstracted from police reports and assigned a census tract.
  • (13) Geographical differences in stomach cancer were most closely related to occupationally derived indices of socio-economic structure from the 1971 census, and to measures of domestic crowding from the 1931 census and 1936 survey.
  • (14) The data are from the Bureau of the Census Current Population Survey and annual money income before taxes is the measure of income.
  • (15) The materials of the complex study of population's health in connection with the 1989 census of the population in many respects meet these requirements and the paper provides ways for the organization and cooperation with the chairs of social hygiene while carrying out this large-scale study.
  • (16) The number of children, born alive with clubfoot, and detailed census data for the period were available.
  • (17) The population at risk at the mid-point of the study (1975) was calculated from the National Population Censuses of 1970 and 1980, and consisted of 1125960 men and 880269 women.
  • (18) The sample of 1,302 adolescents aged 12 to 16 came from households selected by stratified, cluster and random sampling of the 1981 Canada Census.
  • (19) Disease surveillance and population surveys of risk characteristics in a northeast rural community of Japan (1965 census population, 7,030) are combined in an attempt to relate morbidity and risk factor trends for coronary heart disease and stroke during the last 2 decades.
  • (20) The National Study of Internal Medicine Manpower (NaSIMM) reports on the results of its 1989-1990 census of residency programs.

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